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ASUS GTX 950-2G “Unplugged” Review

UNIGINE Valley Benchmark is a new GPU stress-testing tool from the developers of the very popular and highly acclaimed Heaven Benchmark. The forest-covered valley surrounded by vast mountains amazes with its scale from a bird’s-eye view and is extremely detailed down to every leaf and flower petal.

This non-synthetic benchmark powered by the state-of-the art UNIGINE Engine showcases a comprehensive set of cutting-edge graphics technologies with a dynamic environment and fully interactive modes available to the end user.

PNY_950_960_XLR8_CONFIG (15) PNY_950_960_XLR8_CONFIG (14)

We test Unigine Valley using the Extreme HD Preset, changing the resolution setting only for 1440p.

ASUS_950_2G_VALLEY1

ASUS_950_2G_VALLEY2

Unigine Valley continues to show a gap between conventional GTX 950s though the GTX 950-2G maintains a good lead over the GTX 750 Ti and manages to keep pace with an overclocked R7 370 that consumes much more power.

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7 comments

  1. not-a-fanboi-honest

    Curious timing for this review with the low power RX cards due soon. It would be good to see a follow up review comparing this to those.

  2. Unfortunately people buying this card will be building on a budget and won’t be running watercooled intel i7’s on an SSD with 32gb of high speed DDR4 ram, meaning the results will be VERY different for them.

    I know it has been reviewed this way to show the cards true potential without any bottlenecking, but if anybody sees these results, then buys the gpu to pair with their £60 stock cooled amd processor and 4gb of RAM, running on a 7200rpm HDD disk then they are going to be devastated when they get massively worse results.

    Personally, i’d rather see GPU’s tested in the average setup they will be expected to be bought for.

  3. Thanks for the feedback, it is a tricky situation – keeping a test bench consistent between a wide range of products (as low as R7 360 but as high as R9 390) but also needing to make sure it matches the target audience for a given product, such as in this case. Having test benches that reflect different price points (low-mid range, mid to high-end) is something I’ll (re)consider going forward as I have done this before in my reviewing career.

  4. Definitely, we’ll try and take a look at as many new products as possible including anything new from AMD in the same power/performance segment.

  5. Definitely something i’d look forward to seeing. I would also find it very interesting to see how much of a bottleneck a budget setup vs a test rig like this would be, but that also doubles the amount of work required for a review.

    Either way, it is a very good review, and I like seeing the lower end products getting highlighted.

    Thanks for the response Ryan.

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  7. I’m running an Elsa GTX 950 2GB (Great Japanese brand, no power connector) on a 10 year old Asus P5 Mobo Win 10 X64 Pro with a Q9650 and 8gb cheapo ram (Nanya PC2-6400 DDR2-SDRAM) and it runs Doom 2016 Vulkan on medium at ~45fps. No Mans Sky, XCOM 2 also perform really well on medium settings. Bear in mind it’s running in a PCI Express 1.1 slot too.

    I had an Asus GTX 750Ti in there but it started going crazy with the fan going on and off, and I found this Elsa 950 in Akihabara going really cheap. Knocks the 750Ti out of the park.

    I think it’s this one: http://www.elsa-jp.co.jp/products/products-top/graphicsboard/geforce/midrange/geforce_gtx950_2gb/